63 episodes

This podcast site contains timely discussions and interviews from the Pacific Northwest concerning practical notions and methodologies for all -- regardless of level of experience or knowledge -- who are curious, interested or an ongoing student/practitioner of Himalayan (aka Tibetan) Buddhism.
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The Chenrezig Project is a Buddhist study/discussion group located in Boulder County, CO.  Mark Winwood (mwinwood@gmail.com), the Chenrezig Project’s founder and a member of the teaching faculty at Naropa University in Boulder, hosts these broadcasts. We are involved in an ongoing variety of teachings, writings, community events, etc. To learn more, please visit our website at www.ChenrezigProject.org.


 ** ** **

Our podcasts feature music composed and performed by Bobby Vega. Bobby has been playing and creating music for more than four decades. He began his professional career as a bass player in 1973 (at the age of 16) on Sly Stones’ single “I Get High on You.” A Bay Area musician’s musician, Bobby has played with artists ranging from Joan Baez and Etta James to Santana and the Jefferson Starship and he was added to Bass Player Magazine’s Top 100 Bassists of all time in 2017.

An accomplished composer, Bobby has collaborated on the soundtracks for the TV documentary Vietnam: A Television History, the Francis Ford Coppola film One from the Heart, and the Sega video game Sonic The Hedgehog. Four decades and nearly 5,000 gigs after he first began playing bass, Bobby Vega continues to develop his complex and heady blend of rhythm & blues, rock, funk, technique, and tone, “laying it down” with incredible feeling and groove.  More about Bobby and his music may be found at www.bobbyvega.com.   


Elegant Mind Podcasts.
© 2018-2021, Mark Winwood.
All Rights Reserved.

Contact:
mwinwood@chenrezigproject.org

Tibetan Buddhism: The Elegant Mind chenrezigproject

    • Religion & Spirituality
    • 5.0 • 3 Ratings

This podcast site contains timely discussions and interviews from the Pacific Northwest concerning practical notions and methodologies for all -- regardless of level of experience or knowledge -- who are curious, interested or an ongoing student/practitioner of Himalayan (aka Tibetan) Buddhism.
<br>


The Chenrezig Project is a Buddhist study/discussion group located in Boulder County, CO.  Mark Winwood (mwinwood@gmail.com), the Chenrezig Project’s founder and a member of the teaching faculty at Naropa University in Boulder, hosts these broadcasts. We are involved in an ongoing variety of teachings, writings, community events, etc. To learn more, please visit our website at www.ChenrezigProject.org.


 ** ** **

Our podcasts feature music composed and performed by Bobby Vega. Bobby has been playing and creating music for more than four decades. He began his professional career as a bass player in 1973 (at the age of 16) on Sly Stones’ single “I Get High on You.” A Bay Area musician’s musician, Bobby has played with artists ranging from Joan Baez and Etta James to Santana and the Jefferson Starship and he was added to Bass Player Magazine’s Top 100 Bassists of all time in 2017.

An accomplished composer, Bobby has collaborated on the soundtracks for the TV documentary Vietnam: A Television History, the Francis Ford Coppola film One from the Heart, and the Sega video game Sonic The Hedgehog. Four decades and nearly 5,000 gigs after he first began playing bass, Bobby Vega continues to develop his complex and heady blend of rhythm & blues, rock, funk, technique, and tone, “laying it down” with incredible feeling and groove.  More about Bobby and his music may be found at www.bobbyvega.com.   


Elegant Mind Podcasts.
© 2018-2021, Mark Winwood.
All Rights Reserved.

Contact:
mwinwood@chenrezigproject.org

    Kleshas: Like Highway Robbers . . .

    Kleshas: Like Highway Robbers . . .

    Ignorance, Anger, Confusion, Greed, Jealousy, Arrogance, Cynical Doubt, Laziness, Wrong Views, Low Self Esteem, Fear.
    In Buddhism these are known as Kleshas, mental hindrances that cloud our mind, setting the stage for unwholesome (i.e., self-centered) intentional actions.
    They are stubborn -- sneaky, lurking -- like highway robbers, always ready to pounce . . . contaminating our perspectives while bringing about unfavorable moods and vulnerabilities.
    But they are transient . . . just thoughts, and so . . . enter Lojong (Tibetan mind training).
    (Length: 12 minutes)
    Written and shared here by Mark Winwood of the Chenrezig Project (mwinwood@gmail.com) with musical accompaniment by San Francisco Bay-area musician Bobby Vega.

    • 12 min
    Some Thoughts on Mindfulness Practice

    Some Thoughts on Mindfulness Practice

    We often cannot change our external environment. We certainly cannot change many (or most) of the people we encounter.
    But Mindfulness practice can lead us to clearly 'see' -- and help us to genuinely understand -- what is happening in the present moment (i.e., as it is happening) rather than being confused and/or lost in our thoughts, opinions and reactions.
    Through experiential mindfulness, we can insightfully change in remarkable ways.
    And consider: once we are changed, everything changes.
    (Length: 17 minutes)
    Written and shared here by Mark Winwood of the Chenrezig Project (mwinwood@gmail.com) with musical accompaniment by San Francisco Bay-area musician Bobby Vega.

    • 17 min
    Dharma in the ”Wild Place”

    Dharma in the ”Wild Place”

    From a divine 17th century French Canadian cathedral . . .  to a young couple presenting Medicine Buddha-oriented offerings in the midst of northern Colorado's 'Rawah Wilderness' -- a tale of bountiful faith and practice touching distant times and realms.
    (Length: 14 minutes)
    Written and shared here by Mark Winwood of the Chenrezig Project (mwinwood@gmail.com), with musical accompaniment by San Francisco Bay-area musician Bobby Vega in collaboration with Chris Rossbach.

    • 13 min
    Turn Suffering Into Compassion -- A Tonglen Meditation

    Turn Suffering Into Compassion -- A Tonglen Meditation

    "Tonglen" is a Tibetan term that implies 'exchanging oneself with others’.
    It refers to a meditation practice found in Himalayan/Mahayana Buddhism which allows the awakening of genuine compassion. "Tong" translates as 'giving or sending', and "len" as 'receiving or taking.'
    Tonglen practice is experiential; it gradually wears away our habitually obsessive grasping at a false sense of self (e.g., stubborn ego fixation / relentless identification with the personality).
    Through meditative visualization(s), Tonglen effectively reverses our familiar pattern of avoiding suffering and seeking pleasure. As this occurs, we finally liberate ourselves from the deeply rooted  -- and destructive -- prison of selfishness.
    (Length: 45 minutes. Included herein: Tonglen discussion followed by a guided meditation which begins at approximately 20 minutes.)
    Written and shared here by Mark Winwood of the Chenrezig Project (mwinwood@gmail.com).

    • 45 min
    Trees, Indra’s Net and the Unfolding Archaeology of All that Is

    Trees, Indra’s Net and the Unfolding Archaeology of All that Is

    Reflections on Buddhist Dharma, Indra’s Jewel Net and the Trees with which we share our planet . . . as metaphor for the vast intra-connectedness of phenomena, ideas and life.
    Since all things are intimately -- and infinitely -- intertwined with one another, every action is echoed throughout time and space, creating a butterfly effect across the cosmos . . . and practically, within each moment of our experience(s).
    Let your contemplative imagination take wing . . . 
    (Length: 14 minutes)
    Written by Mark Winwood and presented here by Kathy Ambrose, both of the Chenrezig Project.  Accompanying music composed and performed by the renowned San Francisco Bay-area musician Bobby Vega, joined by the Turtle Island String Quartet.

    • 14 min
    Guided Meditation: Breath Contemplation / River of Metta

    Guided Meditation: Breath Contemplation / River of Metta

    For your contemplation: Appreciative thoughts and kindness-empowering visualizations are shared in this gentle meditation.
    As the River flows . . .  May all beings be happy -- May all beings be safe -- May all beings be well -- May all beings be peaceful and at ease.
    Sit comfortably, focus, center . . . approach and enter your meditative mind.  Or simply listen. 
    (Length: 28 minutes)
    Written and shared here by Mark Winwood of the Chenrezig Project.

    • 28 min

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